Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Mysore Pak Recipe | Ghee Mysore Pak | Krishna Sweets Mysore Pa Recipe | Soft Mysore Pak | Nei Mysore Pak' imprimido.

Receta Mysore Pak Recipe | Ghee Mysore Pak | Krishna Sweets Mysore Pa Recipe | Soft Mysore Pak | Nei Mysore Pak
by Divya Pramil

PREPARATION METHOD

Melt ghee and set aside, see that it is hot throughout the process. Grease a pan and set aside. (You will not have anytime later to grease pans so keep it ready, use a deeper bowl to get mysore pak pieces with good width)

Place a heavy nonstick pan on flame and add sugar into it. Pour water and stir well. Wait until the sugar syrup reaches one string consistency. At this stage switch off the flame. (Take a drop of sugar syrup in a spoon and rub it between your thumb and index finger and pull, see if you get a string. If your sugar syrup crystallizes please don't use it; to know this, just drop some of the syrup into a bowl of water if it hardens immediately, it means you have boiled it too much and sugar has started to crystallize, this will make your mysore pak hard so discard it and start from beginning)

Hope you are able to see the string in the following pic.

Pour half of this sugar syrup into gram flour and mix well to make a lump free batter. Pour this batter back into the pan (that has the remaining sugar syrup) and stir well so that it gets mixed up well and smooth. Then switch on the flame. This method will be easier and will not form lumps. (But instead you can directly add the flour inside the sugar syrup and keep stirring as you add, this direct method of adding flour directly into the syrup will be bit difficult as you will have to add the flour little by little and simultaneously keep mixing up. But its upto you follow the method that seems easy to you)

Now add a tablespoon of melted ghee and stir well. Similarly, add ghee little by little and keep stirring until all the ghee is all over. Then add oil and stir well.

After about 15 minutes the mixture will seem very frothy. It will bubble even after you stir it well. Now remove from flame and pour into a greased tray. When it warms up cut into desired shapes and let it cool down completely. (You can even serve it warm)

Stays well for 10 to 15 days when stored properly.

TIP 1: If your sugar syrup isn't right your mysore pak wont come out properly. Also if you don't remove from flame after the frothy stage your mysore pak will become hard. Add enough ghee to get the similar taste and will stay soft.

TIP 2: You can replace half quantity of ghee with oil but the flavor will not come out that good as in Krishna sweet version.

TIP 3: Make sure to use fresh gram flour and good branded ghee to get the best flavors.

TIP 4: If the mysore pak does not set well and stays gooey it means that either your mixture hasn't got cooked enough, if so pour it back into the pan and cook for some more time. Or it may mean that your sugar syrup wasn't right. Repairing then would be really difficult so make sure to use the correct ratio of ingredients. When you make it for the first time make sure to try with lesser quantities.

TIP 5: Make sure to add ghee little by little, incorporating so gives a really good texture.

TIP 6: Never leave the mix unnoticed when on flame, it will get easily lumpy and also do not cook on high flame as it may get burnt.

TIP 7: Prolonged cooking will make the mysorepak hard. Always take care to remove from flame when the batter seems very frothy.

TIP 8: To find if mysore pak is ready just drop a small piece of the batter into a bowl of water if mysore pak mixture turns hard immediately it means your mixture has got overcooked, your mysorepak will be hard for sure; If your mysorepak mixture is soft and you are able to roll a soft ball that is firm and not sticky that is the right time to remove the batter from flame. If your mysore pak mixture does not form a ball and gets dissolved in water easily that means you have to cook further more.

TIP 9: The color of the mysore pak depends on the color of ghee and the besan flour you use.

TIP 10: From my experience it would be better if you line the bottom of the pan with a butter paper/parchment paper before pouring the cooked batter. This will help you to remove the mysore pak easily from the pan.

REPAIRING: (This repairing process may not work if there's trouble with your sugar syrup. This works if you have overcooked the batter. You may not get the melt in mouth taste but it will be much better) If your mysorepak turns hard, just crumble it and grind into a smooth paste by adding very little water. Pour it into a pan again, place on flame and pour some more ghee or oil little by little, keep stirring simultaneously. When it reaches the frothy consistency and seems thick pour it immediately into the greased pans. If you are lucky it will set better than before. Do the same even if your mysorepak has not set well.

Soft, delectable melt in mouth Mysorepak / Mysurpa is now ready!! Tastes so divine with a dominant yet palatable ghee flavor just like the store bought ones.. Yummm!!!